Stiffer penalties for "forgetful" drivers

Drivers who fail to disclose who was behind the wheel when caught speeding will now face stiffer penalties.

Motorists convicted of failing to give information about the identity of a speeding driver will receive six penalty points instead of the previous three after changes brought in by the Driving Standards Agency on Monday.

Reuters reports that the government is concerned that drivers are using the loophole of claiming they do not know who was driving a vehicle when clocked speeding to avoid fines and points on their licence.

Former Conservative MP Neil Hamilton and his wife Christine avoided a speeding fine four years ago after they said neither of them could remember who was behind the wheel when they were flashed by a speed camera.

Most speeding offences are detected by speed cameras, which cannot always identify the driver.

But critics say the change will unfairly penalise those who genuinely do not know who was driving a car when a speeding offence was committed and further devalue the points system.

“The authorities have forgotten that driving licence points were supposed to help identify risky drivers. Giving extra points to people who simply fumble the paperwork will further devalue the licence points system.”

Motorists whose cars are stolen will escape the penalty as long as they can prove that the vehicle had been taken without their permission.

Today also saw the jailing of the fastest driver ever caught by a speed camera in the UK. Tim Brady, 33, was clocked doing 172mph in a Porsche 911 Turbo on a rural A-road in January, Oxford Crown Court heard. He was sentenced to 10 weeks in prison and banned from driving for three years.